Translate

Saturday, July 11, 2026

The Contractual Fiancée

```

Chapter Eight

The Man Beneath the Mountain

A Romantic Suspense Novel by J. A. Jackson

```

The eyes in the tunnel did not blink.

They hovered beyond the reach of Rowan’s flashlight, two pale points of light suspended in the darkness beneath the cabin.

Olivia stood behind him with one hand pressed against the glowing mark near her collarbone. Heat pulsed beneath her fingertips. It did not feel like fire anymore.

It felt like a heartbeat.

Not hers.

Something below had awakened.

The cold pouring from the passage carried the scent of wet stone, old cedar, and another fragrance she recognized but could not immediately place.

Lavender.

Her grandmother had kept dried lavender inside old books and linen drawers. The fragrance had followed Olivia through childhood, lingering in closets, journals, and the soft folds of quilts handed down through generations.

It did not belong beneath a mountain.

The voice rose again from the tunnel.

“I’ve been waiting for the Bride.”

Calm.

Male.

Familiar to Rowan.

Olivia watched his shoulders lock.

He stood with the pistol extended in one hand and the flashlight in the other. His entire body had become unnaturally still, as though movement might confirm what his mind refused to accept.

“Who are you?” Olivia asked.

The figure shifted deeper in the shadows.

Rowan answered before the man could.

“August DeVille.”

The name left his mouth like a confession.

Olivia looked from Rowan to the glowing eyes.

“Your grandfather?”

Rowan did not lower the weapon.

“Yes.”

The man stepped forward.

The beam of Rowan’s flashlight touched polished black shoes first, then the hem of a long charcoal coat. A silver-tipped walking stick appeared beside him, resting against the stone floor.

He moved farther into the light.

Age had sharpened rather than softened his face. His silver hair had been combed straight back from a high forehead. A narrow scar crossed his left eyebrow. The eyes watching them were a startling green, the same green that appeared in Rowan’s whenever anger or fear stripped away his control.

August DeVille looked no older than the portrait Olivia had seen upstairs.

No older than a man in his late sixties.

Yet Rowan had attended his funeral fifteen years ago.

August rested both hands on the head of his walking stick.

“You have his eyes,” Olivia said.

The old man’s expression softened.

“And you have hers.”

“Whose?”

August looked at the mark glowing beneath her sweater.

“The woman history buried twice.”

Rowan’s voice struck like a blade.

“Stay where you are.”

August’s gaze moved to him.

“You always did mistake fear for authority.”

“I watched them lower your coffin into the ground.”

“Yes.”

“I carried it.”

“I remember.”

Rowan’s grip tightened on the pistol.

“You remember?”

“I was closer than you think.”

A muscle jumped in Rowan’s jaw.

Olivia could feel the violence gathering beneath his restraint. It was not the violence of a reckless man. It was something more dangerous.

The fury of a wounded child who had spent fifteen years grieving someone who had chosen to disappear.

August took another step.

Rowan raised the weapon higher.

“Stop.”

The older man obeyed.

For a moment, grandfather and grandson stared at each other across the stone staircase.

The resemblance between them became almost painful. The same rigid posture. The same carefully controlled expression. The same habit of standing as though every room might become a battlefield.

Olivia wondered whether Rowan recognized how much of August lived inside him.

Perhaps that was why he looked so furious.

“Were you dead?” Olivia asked.

August turned toward her.

“No.”

“Were you buried?”

“A coffin was buried.”

“That is not what I asked.”

A faint smile touched his mouth.

“You are exactly as Ophelia described.”

The name silenced all three of them.

Olivia remembered the portrait in the attic.

Ophelia Jackson beneath the redwoods, wearing flared jeans and a rust-colored jacket, her hand resting on an old blue Ford.

August had stood beside her.

Young.

Watchful.

Bound to protect her.

“What happened to Ophelia?” Olivia asked.

August’s smile disappeared.

“That answer will cost more than you are prepared to give tonight.”

“I have already been forced into an engagement, marked by something I do not understand, accused of being descended from a legendary queen, and invited into a tunnel by a dead man. I think I can afford an answer.”

Rowan glanced back at her.

Despite everything, a brief flicker of admiration moved through his eyes.

August noticed.

“So,” he said quietly. “The bond has begun.”

Olivia’s hand curled into a fist.

“There is no bond.”

The golden thread beneath her engagement ring tightened.

Pain flashed through her finger and traveled across the space between them.

Rowan flinched.

August lowered his eyes to the light circling Rowan’s wrist.

“The Archive disagrees.”

“This engagement is contractual,” Olivia said.

“All engagements are contracts.”

“Not like this one.”

“No.” August studied her carefully. “This one is older.”

Rowan’s voice hardened.

“Enough.”

August looked at him.

“You brought her to the threshold without explaining what she was.”

“I didn’t know.”

“You knew enough.”

“I knew stories. Warnings. Fragments you left behind.”

“And yet you allowed her to sign.”

Rowan stepped down onto the first stone stair.

“I was given forty-eight hours to stop the Trust from binding her to Graves.”

Olivia stared at him.

The glowing mark burned hotter.

“What did you say?”

Rowan froze.

August said nothing.

The silence beneath the cabin seemed to expand.

Olivia descended one step until she stood beside Rowan.

“You told me you agreed to the engagement because the will required it.”

“It did.”

“You did not tell me Dr. Graves was the alternative.”

“I was trying to determine whether that part of the Trust directive was genuine.”

“That was not your decision to make.”

“I know.”

“You knew another man could be selected for me?”

“Yes.”

“And you kept that from me?”

“Yes.”

The admission cut more deeply than an excuse would have.

Olivia stepped away from him.

The thread of golden light stretched between them.

Rowan’s gaze followed it.

He looked like a man watching a bridge collapse beneath his feet.

“I thought I could protect you better if you stayed close to me,” he said.

“You thought.”

“Yes.”

“You decided.”

“Yes.”

“You never asked.”

“No.”

August watched them with an expression Olivia could not read.

“Do not look so pleased,” Rowan said to him.

“I am not pleased.”

“You wanted this.”

“I wanted you prepared.”

“You faked your death.”

“To keep you alive.”

“You abandoned me.”

“To keep you alive.”

“You left me to clean up your secrets, manage your Trust, bury your name, and carry responsibilities you never explained.”

August’s eyes darkened.

“I left because those responsibilities would have killed you.”

“They nearly did anyway.”

The words struck the stone walls and returned as echoes.

Olivia looked at Rowan.

His face remained controlled, but the emotion beneath it was unmistakable. She had seen him frightened, angry, suspicious, and protective.

She had never seen him betrayed.

Not like this.

The pistol in his hand lowered a fraction.

“Come upstairs,” Rowan said. “Slowly.”

August’s grip tightened around his walking stick.

“I cannot cross the threshold.”

“Why?”

“Because the house no longer recognizes me as Guardian.”

Olivia looked at the glowing mark on his palm.

“The Bride Mark.”

“This is not the Bride Mark.”

August opened his hand.

The symbol appeared similar to the one beneath Olivia’s collarbone, but the lines curved inward rather than opening like a doorway.

“It is the Keeper’s Seal,” he said. “A mark given to the Guardian bound to a Bride.”

Rowan glanced at his wrist.

The golden thread had begun forming a faint version of the same symbol against his skin.

August saw it.

His expression changed.

Not fear.

Grief.

“No,” he whispered.

“What?” Rowan demanded.

August looked at Olivia.

“The Archive accepted him.”

Olivia glanced at the mark forming on Rowan’s wrist.

“What does that mean?”

“It means you are no longer pretending.”

She nearly laughed.

There was nothing humorous in the sound that escaped her.

“You believe a glowing symbol can turn a false engagement into a real one?”

“No,” August said. “I believe the two of you did that before the symbols appeared.”

Olivia opened her mouth to deny it.

Nothing came out.

Images moved through her mind.

Rowan catching her near the lake.

His hand steady against her waist.

His body covering hers when the windows exploded.

The look in his eyes when he thought she might be hurt.

The ache that moved through her whenever he withdrew behind secrets.

The anger that came not because she felt nothing, but because she had begun to feel too much.

She looked away.

August’s gaze moved to Rowan.

“You recognize the bond.”

Rowan said nothing.

That silence frightened Olivia more than denial.

A tremor passed through the tunnel.

Dust drifted from the ceiling.

August turned toward the darkness behind him.

“We have spent too long at the entrance.”

“What is down there?” Olivia asked.

“The first passage to the Archive.”

Rowan lifted the flashlight.

“You said you could not cross the threshold.”

“I cannot come up.”

“But we can go down.”

“Yes.”

“That sounds like a trap.”

“It is.”

August’s answer came without hesitation.

Olivia felt the cold deepen.

“A trap set by whom?”

“Dr. Graves.”

The name seemed to travel through the mountain.

A second tremor moved beneath their feet.

August looked toward Olivia.

“He knows the Bride has awakened.”

“How?”

“The mark sent a signal through every surviving gate connected to the Archive.”

“How many gates exist?”

“Seven.”

“Where are they?”

“California.”

“That is not an answer.”

“It is the only answer I can safely give while the walls are listening.”

Rowan’s expression sharpened.

“The walls?”

August lifted the head of his walking stick and struck it once against the floor.

A low metallic echo traveled through the tunnel.

The sound returned from somewhere far below.

Then something answered.

Three slow knocks.

Olivia’s skin tightened.

“That is not the mountain,” August said. “Graves has people in the lower passages.”

“How many?” Rowan asked.

“I do not know.”

“Armed?”

“Yes.”

“Human?”

August hesitated.

“Some.”

Olivia folded her arms.

“I am beginning to hate that pause.”

“So did Ophelia.”

“Stop comparing me to her.”

“I am not comparing you. I am warning you.”

“Then warn me clearly.”

August studied her.

“Ophelia trusted the wrong DeVille.”

Rowan’s face hardened.

“My grandfather?”

“No.”

The answer settled into the silence.

Olivia looked at the portrait ring hidden in her pocket.

“O.J. and R.D.,” she said.

August’s eyes dropped to her coat.

“You found the ring.”

“It found me.”

Rowan turned.

“You still have it?”

Olivia reached into her pocket and removed the antique ring. The blue stone glowed faintly in her palm.

August stared at it.

For the first time, his composure broke completely.

He stumbled back.

“Where did you get that?”

“It was left on the porch.”

“By whom?”

“We don’t know.”

August’s face had gone pale.

“Put it down.”

“The ring spoke to me.”

“Put it down now.”

Olivia closed her fingers around it.

“It said not to let Rowan take me below.”

August looked toward his grandson.

“Did it use his name?”

“Yes.”

“What name?”

“Rowan Ambrose DeVille.”

August exhaled slowly.

“That was not Ophelia.”

“How do you know?”

“Because she never called him Rowan Ambrose.”

Rowan’s attention sharpened.

“She knew me?”

August’s eyes moved to him.

“She held you the night you were born.”

The flashlight shook slightly in Rowan’s hand.

“You told me she disappeared before my parents married.”

“I lied.”

“You are becoming remarkably consistent.”

“She returned once. Only once.”

“Why?”

August looked at Olivia.

“To see whether the next Guardian had been born.”

A sound echoed from deep within the passage.

Stone scraping against stone.

August turned.

“We have to move.”

Rowan lifted his weapon.

“You first.”

August began walking down the tunnel.

Rowan looked at Olivia.

“You stay behind me.”

She gave him a cold stare.

“You have lost the privilege of issuing orders.”

“This is not about privilege.”

“It always is with men who decide what women should know for their own protection.”

His expression tightened.

“You can hate me upstairs.”

“I am doing a remarkable job of it down here.”

A brief spark appeared in his eyes.

Despite her anger, despite the danger, despite the impossible man waiting below them, the corner of Olivia’s mouth nearly moved.

She stopped it.

Rowan saw it anyway.

His gaze lingered on her face.

The golden thread between them warmed.

For one suspended second, the tunnel, the Trust, and August disappeared.

There was only Rowan.

Only the regret in his eyes.

Only the words he did not seem to know how to say.

“I should have told you,” he said quietly.

“Yes.”

“I should have trusted you.”

“Yes.”

“I was afraid you would leave.”

The honesty struck her harder than his secrets.

“You had no right to take that choice from me.”

“I know.”

“Do you?”

“Yes.”

She searched his face.

“Would you do it again?”

He looked toward the darkness where August had disappeared.

Then back at her.

“No.”

The answer came without delay.

Olivia wanted to believe him.

That was the danger.

She stepped past him and descended.

“Then do not lie to me again.”

Rowan followed.

The stone staircase curved beneath the cabin. Electric light did not reach the passage. Only Rowan’s flashlight and the faint glow from Olivia’s mark illuminated their way.

Ancient symbols covered the walls.

Some had been carved with precision. Others looked scratched into the rock by desperate hands.

Olivia paused beside a series of spirals.

“I have seen these in the journals.”

August stopped farther below.

“What do they say?”

She traced the symbols with her gaze.

“The translation is incomplete.”

“Try.”

“The first symbol means blood or inheritance. The second means door. The third can mean bride, queen, or sacrifice.”

Rowan looked at August.

“Convenient ambiguity.”

“Ancient languages rarely cared about modern comfort,” August said.

Olivia continued reading.

“The next line says the door opens twice.”

August’s expression became grave.

“You are certain?”

“Yes.”

He looked toward the lower passage.

“That inscription was not here before.”

Stone shifted again beneath the mountain.

A warm breeze rose from below.

It carried the scent of smoke.

Not wood smoke.

Oil.

Rowan turned off his flashlight.

Darkness swallowed them.

Olivia’s mark became the only source of light.

“What are you doing?” she whispered.

“Someone is coming.”

At first she heard nothing.

Then footsteps.

More than one person.

August moved back toward them.

“There is an alcove ahead.”

They descended quickly.

The narrow passage opened into a shallow chamber hidden behind a broken stone column. Rowan guided Olivia into it, then positioned himself at the entrance.

His body blocked hers.

Again.

She wanted to object.

She did not.

August crouched beside them.

Voices approached.

Two men appeared in the passage carrying lanterns. Their faces were covered with black cloth. Both wore dark tactical clothing and carried short rifles.

A woman followed.

She wore no mask.

Her white-blond hair had been pulled into a severe knot. A black coat reached her ankles. Silver earrings shaped like tiny keys gleamed against her neck.

She stopped directly outside the alcove.

Olivia held her breath.

The woman tilted her head.

“She is near.”

One of the men looked around.

“The lower gate remains sealed.”

“It will open.”

“Graves said the Bride might resist.”

“All Brides resist.”

The woman reached into her coat and withdrew a small glass vial.

Dark red liquid moved inside it.

“Blood?” one man asked.

“Insurance.”

The woman continued walking.

The armed men followed.

Their footsteps faded into the lower passage.

August remained still until the lantern light disappeared.

“Who was she?” Rowan whispered.

“Celeste Graves.”

“His daughter?”

August looked at him.

“His wife.”

Olivia frowned.

“She looks forty.”

“She looked forty when I met her in 1978.”

Olivia pressed one hand against the stone wall.

She needed the solidity of it.

“You expect us to believe neither Graves nor his wife ages?”

“I expect nothing. Belief is a luxury. Survival is not.”

Rowan stepped from the alcove.

“We go back.”

August blocked the passage with his walking stick.

“You cannot.”

“I can.”

“The entrance closed after you crossed the threshold.”

Rowan turned.

The staircase behind them had vanished.

A wall of unbroken stone stood where they had descended.

Olivia approached it.

“No seam.”

“The Archive decides the direction of travel once the Bride enters,” August said.

“Then make it open.”

“I cannot.”

“You lived down here for fifteen years.”

“I survived down here. That is not the same thing.”

Rowan’s eyes narrowed.

“You said Graves set the trap.”

“He did.”

“And you brought us into it.”

“Yes.”

Olivia stared at August.

“Why?”

“Because the Bride Mark appeared before you were ready. The cabin was already compromised. Graves would have taken you before dawn.”

“And now?”

“Now you have a chance to reach the first gate before he does.”

“A chance?”

August looked at her with solemn intensity.

“The Archive does not choose the strongest Bride.”

“What does it choose?”

“The one who refuses to surrender herself.”

Olivia glanced toward Rowan.

He understood the accusation hidden inside the words.

The Trust’s message had claimed he agreed to surrender her.

The ring had warned her not to follow him below.

August claimed the Archive required her to resist anyone attempting to control her.

Every path led back to the same question.

Could she trust Rowan?

The answer should have been no.

Yet when the armed men passed, Rowan’s first instinct had been to place himself between them.

When the windows exploded, he covered her.

When she demanded the truth, he admitted what he had done instead of hiding behind excuses.

He had betrayed her trust.

He had also protected her life.

Both things could be true.

That was what made him dangerous.

August continued down the passage.

They followed.

The tunnel broadened into a corridor supported by carved pillars. Symbols spiraled up each column. Some depicted women holding torches. Others showed crowned figures standing beside winged animals.

Olivia moved closer to the carvings.

“These are older than the mission era.”

“Much older,” August said.

“How old?”

“At least a thousand years.”

“That would rewrite California history.”

“That is why the Archive was hidden.”

“Who built this?”

“The Califian order.”

“Queen Califia was considered a fictional figure.”

“By the people who wrote the surviving version of history.”

Olivia’s scholar’s mind fought against everything she saw.

The stonework resembled no single known culture. African geometric patterns appeared beside Indigenous Californian symbols. Mediterranean columns blended with shapes reminiscent of Mesoamerican temples.

It looked impossible.

Yet the workmanship was real.

She touched one of the pillars.

The mark beneath her collarbone flashed.

The chamber disappeared.

She stood beneath a burning sky.

Women carried books through a stone city while ships burned along a distant coast. Bells rang. Horses screamed. A crowned woman stood on a high terrace, holding a golden key against her chest.

“We cannot save the city,” someone said.

“We save the memory,” the queen replied.

The vision shifted.

A procession moved inland through mountains and redwood forests. Women carried boxes, scrolls, weapons, and sleeping children.

Another flash.

The boxes disappeared beneath stone.

The doors sealed.

The queen placed her hand against a black wall.

“When the world is ready to remember us, my daughter will return.”

Olivia tore her hand from the pillar.

The tunnel returned.

She staggered.

Rowan caught her.

“What happened?”

“She showed me.”

“Who?”

“Califia.”

August stepped closer.

“What did you see?”

Olivia described the city, the burning ships, the women carrying records inland, and the golden key in the queen’s hand.

August’s face became increasingly troubled.

“The first memory,” he said.

“You have seen it?”

“No Bride has seen the evacuation before reaching the central Archive.”

“Maybe I am not seeing what you think.”

“You described the Fall of the Western Gate.”

“The what?”

August looked toward Rowan.

“She is awakening too quickly.”

Rowan’s arm tightened around Olivia.

“What happens if it continues?”

“The memories may overwhelm her identity.”

Olivia stepped away from both men.

“I am standing here.”

August looked ashamed.

“I know.”

“Then speak to me, not around me.”

“The Bride carries inherited memory. Not metaphorically. The Archive stores fragments inside the bloodline. When the mark appears, those fragments begin opening.”

“You are saying these visions are memories?”

“Yes.”

“Whose?”

“All of them.”

Olivia looked back at the pillar.

The grief she had felt in the vision remained inside her chest.

The burning city.

The children carried into the mountains.

The desperate determination to preserve a history someone had tried to erase.

Those emotions had not felt borrowed.

They had felt remembered.

“What happened to the Brides who awakened too quickly?”

August did not answer.

Rowan faced him.

“What happened?”

“They lost the boundary between themselves and the women who came before.”

Olivia’s voice lowered.

“They went mad.”

“Some.”

“And the others?”

August’s gaze settled on the Bride Mark.

“They opened the wrong door.”

A distant scream traveled through the passage.

The three of them turned.

It came from somewhere ahead.

Male.

Cut off abruptly.

Rowan lifted the pistol.

“Celeste’s people.”

August struck the floor with his walking stick.

The metal echo traveled through the tunnel.

No answer returned.

“That passage leads to the first gate,” he said.

“Then Graves reached it,” Olivia said.

“No. If he had reached it, the mountain would be moving.”

A deep vibration rolled beneath their feet.

Dust rained from the ceiling.

Rowan looked at August.

“You were saying?”

The older man began walking quickly.

They followed the corridor into an enormous cavern.

Olivia stopped at the threshold.

The ceiling disappeared into darkness. A stone bridge stretched across a chasm so deep that Rowan’s flashlight could not find the bottom.

On the opposite side stood a black door.

It was taller than a three-story building.

Seven golden symbols formed an arch around it.

The central symbol matched Olivia’s Bride Mark.

Celeste Graves stood before the door.

One of the armed men lay motionless at her feet.

The second man pressed both hands against his throat. Blood flowed between his fingers.

A shadow clung to the wall behind him.

It had no body.

Only wings.

The shadow lifted its head.

The man screamed.

It pulled him into the stone.

His rifle struck the ground and clattered across the cavern floor.

Then he was gone.

Olivia could not move.

Celeste turned toward them.

Her expression remained calm.

“You are late.”

Rowan aimed the pistol.

“Step away from the door.”

Celeste smiled.

“You have August’s sense of command without his understanding of consequences.”

August stepped onto the bridge.

“You should not be here.”

“My husband grew tired of waiting.”

“Silas has never understood patience.”

“He has waited four hundred years.”

The words settled over the cavern.

Olivia stared at her.

“Four hundred?”

Celeste’s pale eyes moved to her.

“The Bride.”

The way she spoke the title made Olivia feel catalogued.

Measured.

Owned.

Celeste looked at Rowan next.

“And her Guardian.”

“He is not my Guardian,” Olivia said.

The Keeper’s Seal burned brighter on Rowan’s wrist.

Celeste smiled again.

“The Archive has such a cruel sense of humor.”

“What do you want?” Olivia asked.

“The same thing your ancestors wanted.”

“To preserve the Archive?”

“To control what the world remembers.”

Olivia looked at the towering black door.

“What is behind it?”

“The first truth.”

August’s voice hardened.

“Do not listen to her.”

Celeste touched the vial inside her coat.

“August spent fifteen years telling himself he served the truth while hiding beneath a cabin and allowing his grandson to inherit his failures.”

Rowan’s expression became cold.

“You know nothing about me.”

“I attended your grandfather’s funeral.”

His weapon remained steady.

“So did he.”

Celeste laughed softly.

The sound echoed across the chasm.

“She is good for you, Rowan.”

Olivia felt him glance at her.

Celeste continued.

“You have always needed a woman willing to wound your pride.”

“I am not here for his personal growth.”

“No. You are here because every choice made by both your families led you to this door.”

Olivia stepped onto the bridge.

Rowan caught her arm.

“Wait.”

She looked at his hand.

He released her immediately.

Celeste noticed.

“The bond is unstable.”

“Stop calling it that,” Olivia said.

“You feel his fear whenever you move away from him. He feels your anger before you speak. You dreamed of each other before you met.”

Olivia went still.

Rowan looked at her.

“You dreamed about me?”

“No.”

The answer came too fast.

Celeste’s eyes gleamed.

“The Bride lies.”

Olivia remembered the dream she had experienced three nights before meeting Rowan.

A man standing in snow.

A helicopter turning above a mountain.

Green eyes watching her through smoke.

A hand reaching for hers.

She had dismissed it as imagination.

Rowan’s expression changed.

“You did.”

“This is not the time.”

“When were you planning to tell me?”

She glared at him.

“You concealed an ancient engagement scheme involving an ageless doctor. You do not get to be offended about a dream.”

“Fair.”

Celeste lifted both hands.

“How touching.”

August moved farther onto the bridge.

“Leave, Celeste.”

“I cannot.”

“You mean you will not.”

“No.” She looked toward the black door. “The gate sealed behind me.”

Rowan glanced back.

The entrance to the cavern had vanished.

Stone now covered the tunnel through which they had arrived.

Olivia closed her eyes briefly.

“I am beginning to resent doors.”

Celeste withdrew the glass vial.

“The gate requires blood.”

August’s face tightened.

“Whose blood is that?”

Celeste removed the stopper.

“Ophelia’s.”

August charged across the bridge.

Celeste poured the blood onto the central symbol.

The cavern convulsed.

The stone bridge cracked beneath Olivia’s feet.

Rowan grabbed her around the waist and pulled her back as a section of the bridge collapsed into the chasm.

August leaped across the widening break.

He landed hard on the opposite side.

Celeste pressed her palm against the door.

The golden symbols ignited.

August seized her wrist.

She drove the silver key-shaped earring from her ear into his shoulder.

He cried out.

Rowan fired.

The bullet struck the stone beside Celeste’s head.

She twisted behind August, using his body as a shield.

“Come closer,” she called, “and your grandfather dies for the second time.”

Rowan lowered the pistol slightly.

August’s blood darkened his coat.

Celeste whispered something into his ear.

His face changed.

“What did she say?” Olivia called.

August looked across the broken bridge at her.

“Do not open the door.”

The symbol beneath Olivia’s collarbone blazed.

The black door responded.

A line of gold appeared down its center.

Celeste smiled.

“It does not need her blood now.”

The door had recognized Olivia.

Rowan grabbed her hand.

The connection sent heat through both of them.

The Keeper’s Seal on his wrist flared.

A second line appeared across the door.

The cavern shook harder.

“Let go of her!” August shouted.

Rowan released Olivia.

The door continued opening.

Only an inch.

But light poured through the gap.

Not golden light.

Blue.

The same deep blue as the stone in Ophelia’s ring.

Olivia heard a woman singing.

The melody moved through the cavern and into her bones.

She recognized it.

Her mother used to hum it while cooking.

Her grandmother had sung it while braiding Olivia’s hair.

A song without words.

A song no one remembered learning.

Olivia reached into her pocket and removed the ring.

The blue stone burned against her palm.

The voice inside it whispered.

“Open.”

August struggled against Celeste.

“No!”

The door widened another inch.

Images flashed across Olivia’s mind.

Ophelia running through these passages.

August following.

Another man waiting beside the door.

A younger Dr. Graves.

Except he looked exactly as he did now.

Ophelia held the blue ring.

August begged her not to open the gate.

Graves promised the truth.

Ophelia pressed her hand against the door.

Blood.

Light.

A scream.

Then darkness.

Olivia gasped.

The vision broke.

She looked at August.

“You were here.”

His face went still.

“You brought Ophelia to this gate.”

“I tried to stop her.”

“You lied to Rowan. You lied to me.”

“I was trying to protect the bloodline.”

“From Graves?”

“From the Archive.”

The door groaned.

Celeste smiled against August’s shoulder.

“Tell her the rest.”

August said nothing.

Celeste pressed the silver key deeper into his wound.

“Tell her what you did after Ophelia opened the gate.”

Rowan lifted the pistol.

“Celeste.”

“Ask him,” she said. “Ask your beloved grandfather why Ophelia disappeared.”

Rowan’s voice lowered.

“What did you do?”

August looked at him.

For the first time, the old man seemed truly old.

“I closed the door.”

“With her inside?” Olivia asked.

Silence.

The answer filled the cavern without words.

Rowan’s face emptied of emotion.

“You trapped her in the Archive.”

“I had no choice.”

“There is always a choice,” Olivia said.

“The gate was consuming her. Graves wanted what was inside. If I had left it open, thousands would have died.”

“So you sacrificed her.”

August’s eyes filled with pain.

“I saved the world she loved.”

“Did she ask you to?”

He could not answer.

Olivia looked at Rowan.

The Trust’s message returned to her.

Rowan Ambrose DeVille has agreed to surrender Olivia Jackson to Dr. Silas Graves before midnight.

Maybe the message had not been only a lie.

Maybe it was a warning about a pattern.

A DeVille Guardian.

A Jackson Bride.

A terrible choice made in the name of protecting everyone else.

The ring grew hotter.

The woman’s voice spoke again.

“He will choose the world.”

Olivia stared at Rowan.

He heard something through the bond.

His expression changed.

“What did the ring say?”

She did not answer.

“Olivia.”

“It said you would choose the world.”

His face tightened.

“If the choice is between the world and you, there is no choice.”

Her heart stopped.

August shouted from across the bridge.

“That is what every Guardian says before the gate opens!”

Rowan’s eyes stayed on Olivia.

“I am not him.”

“You carry his mark.”

“I am not him.”

“You kept the same kinds of secrets.”

“I know.”

“You made choices for me.”

“I know.”

“You decided your protection mattered more than my consent.”

“I know.”

His voice broke on the final words.

He stepped closer.

The cracked bridge shifted beneath them.

“I cannot undo what I did,” he said. “But I can choose differently now.”

“How?”

“By giving you the truth even when it makes you leave.”

The golden thread appeared between them again.

Not binding.

Waiting.

Rowan looked at it, then at her.

“Dr. Graves was named in the Trust because he claimed he could stabilize the Bride Mark.”

Olivia’s stomach tightened.

“You knew that too?”

“I found the clause after we arrived at the cabin.”

“What does stabilize mean?”

“I don’t know.”

Celeste answered from across the chasm.

“It means separate the Bride from the memories before they consume her.”

“What is the cost?”

Celeste smiled.

“She loses the bloodline.”

August struggled against her.

“And the Archive takes her place.”

Olivia’s mark pulsed.

“What does that mean?”

“The Bride becomes the gate,” August said.

Celeste’s voice remained serene.

“She becomes immortal.”

“No,” August said. “She becomes trapped.”

The door opened another inch.

Blue light flooded the cavern.

The shadow with wings emerged from the wall.

It moved toward August and Celeste.

August saw it first.

“Run!”

The creature struck.

Celeste released him and leaped aside.

August fell to one knee.

The shadow spread across the stone like spilled ink, rising into the shape of a massive winged woman.

Her face had no features.

Only a crown.

Olivia recognized her from the carvings.

A Guardian of the gate.

The creature turned toward her.

The cavern became silent.

The shadow extended one long arm.

Its hand pointed at Olivia.

Bride

The word entered her mind.

Not sound.

Command.

The black door opened wider.

A force pulled Olivia forward.

Rowan caught her around the waist.

The bridge cracked again.

Stone broke away beneath their feet.

They fell to their knees.

The pull intensified.

Olivia clawed at the bridge.

The ring flew from her hand and slid toward the chasm.

Rowan released her with one arm and caught it inches before it fell.

The moment he touched the blue stone, he screamed.

The cavern vanished from Olivia’s sight.

She saw through Rowan’s memory.

A boy standing beside a grave.

Rain pouring over a black umbrella.

August’s coffin lowering into the earth.

A hand settling on young Rowan’s shoulder.

Dr. Graves.

“You belong to the Trust now,” Graves whispered.

Another memory.

Rowan at twenty-one, signing the covenant.

A sealed page beneath the contract.

A sentence written in blood.

When the Bride awakens, the Guardian will deliver her before midnight.

Another memory.

Rowan discovering the hidden clause at the cabin.

His horror.

His attempt to burn the page.

The paper refusing to ignite.

Then one final image.

Rowan standing alone before a mirror hours earlier.

The Keeper’s Seal appearing on his wrist.

A voice asking him a question.

Will you surrender the Bride to save her life?

Rowan had answered.

“Yes.”

The vision ended.

Olivia stared at him.

He still held the ring.

The blue stone glowed between his fingers.

“You agreed,” she whispered.

His face went pale.

“Not to Graves.”

“The message was true.”

“No. Not the way it sounded.”

“You said yes.”

“To saving you.”

“By surrendering me.”

“To the Archive.”

The cavern shook.

Olivia pulled away from him.

The golden thread stretched taut.

“You lied again.”

“I didn’t understand what the voice meant.”

“You answered anyway.”

“Because it told me you would die before midnight.”

“You do not get to trade my freedom for my life.”

“I know that now.”

“Now?”

The shadow Guardian moved closer.

Blue light poured across the broken bridge.

Celeste crawled toward the black door.

August tried to stop her.

She kicked him away and pressed Ophelia’s blood against the central symbol.

The door opened another foot.

A woman stood on the other side.

Barefoot.

Wearing flared jeans and a rust-colored jacket.

Her dark hair fell around a face identical to Olivia’s.

Ophelia Jackson had not aged.

She looked exactly as she had in the portrait dated 1978.

August stared at her.

His walking stick fell from his hand.

“Ophelia.”

She looked at him without warmth.

“You closed the door.”

August took one shaking step forward.

“I saved you.”

“You buried me.”

Rowan moved beside Olivia.

The shadow Guardian raised both wings.

Ophelia’s gaze found Olivia.

The blue ring in Rowan’s hand began to vibrate.

“Give it to her,” Ophelia said.

Rowan looked at Olivia.

“What happens if I do?”

“She remembers everything.”

August’s voice filled with terror.

“Do not give her that ring.”

Celeste laughed.

“The old coward finally tells the truth.”

Olivia held out her hand.

“Give it to me.”

Rowan looked at the ring.

Then at the door.

Then at August.

The choice moved across his face.

The world.

The Bride.

History preparing to repeat itself.

Olivia’s chest tightened.

“Rowan.”

He placed the ring in her palm.

The moment the blue stone touched her skin, the Archive opened inside her.

A thousand voices screamed.

A thousand women breathed through her lungs.

She saw cities burn.

Oceans rise.

Kings kneel.

Books hidden beneath mountains.

Queen Califia standing before the first gate.

Dr. Graves beside her.

Not as a servant.

Not as a physician.

As her husband.

Olivia staggered.

Rowan caught her.

The truth moved through her blood.

Graves had not spent centuries searching for Queen Califia’s descendant.

He had spent centuries waiting for his wife to return.

Olivia lifted her eyes toward the open door.

Ophelia stood inside the blue light.

Behind her, another figure appeared.

Tall.

Draped in gold.

A crown of black metal rested upon her head.

She had Olivia’s face.

The crowned woman smiled.

Dr. Graves stepped from the darkness beside her.

He looked directly at Olivia.

“My queen,” he said.

The Bride Mark opened like a door beneath her skin.

And Queen Califia answered through Olivia’s mouth.

“My husband.”

End of Chapter Eight

```

Cliff-hanger: The hidden memories reveal that Dr. Graves was not merely Queen Califia’s Keeper—he was her husband. As the Archive opens and Olivia’s body becomes the doorway, Queen Califia speaks through her for the first time. But Rowan realizes the woman standing beside him may no longer be Olivia.

```

Next Chapter

```

Chapter Nine

The Queen Inside Her

Queen Califia has awakened within Olivia. Dr. Graves intends to reclaim the wife he lost centuries ago, and Rowan must find a way to separate Olivia from the ancient queen without destroying them both.

```

© J. A. Jackson. All Rights Reserved.

The Contractual Fiancée

```

Chapter Seven

The Bride Mark

A Romantic Suspense Novel by J. A. Jackson

```

Midnight had always seemed like an invention to Olivia Jackson.

A number printed on clocks. A convenient dividing line between one day and the next. A dramatic hour used in fairy tales when carriages became pumpkins, masks slipped, promises expired, and women discovered too late that magic always came with conditions.

Until tonight.

Tonight, midnight felt alive.

It waited beyond the darkened windows of the Lake Tahoe cabin like a patient predator. It watched through the glass. It counted every breath she took and every second that passed while she stood before Rowan DeVille holding the sealed message from the Trust.

The cream-colored paper trembled between her fingers.

She read the final sentence again, although the words had already burned themselves into her mind.

Rowan Ambrose DeVille has agreed to surrender Olivia Jackson to Dr. Silas Graves before midnight.

She lifted her gaze.

Rowan stood on the opposite side of the massive stone fireplace. Firelight sharpened the planes of his face and turned his eyes almost black. He had not moved since she read the message aloud.

That frightened her more than denial would have.

“Say something.”

His jaw tightened.

“It’s a lie.”

“That is something.” She forced a humorless laugh. “It is not an explanation.”

Rowan took one careful step toward her.

Olivia stepped back.

The movement stopped him more effectively than a weapon.

Pain flashed across his face before control erased it.

“I did not agree to surrender you to Graves.”

“Your name is on the document.”

“A name can be forged.”

“Your signature?”

“Can be forged.”

“The seal of your family Trust?”

His gaze dropped to the embossed crest at the bottom of the page.

That brief hesitation was all the answer her fear needed.

Olivia’s chest tightened.

“You recognize it.”

“Yes.”

“Is it genuine?”

Rowan looked at her.

“Yes.”

The room seemed to tilt.

Outside, wind struck the cabin in a long, low howl. Snow swept against the windows like handfuls of white sand. The old timbers creaked overhead, responding to the storm with groans that sounded almost human.

Olivia tightened her grip on the message.

“Then tell me why your family’s genuine seal appears beneath a promise to give me to a man I barely know.”

“Because someone with access to the Trust wants you to believe I betrayed you.”

“Did you sign anything involving me?”

Silence.

Olivia’s anger rose quickly enough to burn through the coldness gathering inside her.

“Rowan.”

“Not that.”

“That was not my question.”

“I signed a covenant when I was twenty-one.”

“A covenant concerning what?”

His eyes held hers.

“The woman named by the Trust.”

Her heartbeat faltered.

“Me.”

“I didn’t know your name then.”

“But you agreed to something.”

“To protect her.”

“From whom?”

Before he could answer, a voice moved through the cabin.

It did not come from the doorway.

It did not come from upstairs.

It seemed to rise through the floorboards beneath Olivia’s feet.

“He sold you before you ever met.”

Olivia froze.

Rowan moved instantly.

One second he stood near the fireplace. The next, he was in front of her, placing his body between hers and the center of the room.

“Who’s there?”

No answer came.

Rowan reached behind his back and withdrew a compact black pistol Olivia had not known he was carrying.

She stared at it.

“You brought a gun to our fake-engagement getaway?”

“I brought a gun to a remote cabin connected to a Trust that has been manipulating both of our families for generations.”

“You make that sound reasonable.”

“Stay behind me.”

“That is not an answer.”

“It’s the only one that matters while someone is inside this house.”

Rowan crossed the living room, testing the front door, then the windows. Each remained locked from the inside. He checked the kitchen, pantry, rear entrance, and narrow mudroom while Olivia followed at a distance, gripping the Trust message like a shield.

They found no footprints.

No open windows.

No disturbed locks.

And no human being.

Yet Olivia could still feel the voice inside her body.

Not merely heard.

Felt.

A vibration traveling through bone.

Rowan returned to the fireplace and crouched beside the hearth. He passed one hand along the stonework, studying gaps darkened by age.

“There may be an old speaking tube,” he said.

“In a cabin?”

“Old houses had stranger things.”

“That did not sound like someone speaking through a tube.”

He glanced over his shoulder.

“What did it sound like?”

Olivia looked down at the worn pine floor.

“Like the house knew me.”

His expression changed.

Not surprise.

Recognition.

She hated that expression.

“What aren’t you telling me?”

“A great deal.”

“At least you are finally being honest.”

“Honesty and disclosure are not the same thing.”

“That sounds exactly like something a guilty man would say.”

Rowan rose.

“You think I don’t understand that?”

His voice stayed quiet, but the restraint in it stretched thin.

“You think I don’t know how this looks? A contract forces you into an engagement with a man you distrust. Strange things begin happening. You discover my name attached to a promise that seems to place you in danger. Every explanation I give requires you to believe in things no reasonable person should accept.”

“Then give me an unreasonable explanation.”

“You may never look at me the same way again.”

“I am beginning to think I have never looked at you clearly.”

That struck him.

For several seconds, they stood facing one another while the wind rattled the cabin.

Olivia remembered the moments when Rowan had seemed less like an arrogant stranger and more like a man carrying a private wound.

The way he had caught her when she slipped near the lake.

The warmth of his hand at her waist.

The quiet tenderness in his voice when he spoke of people he had failed to save.

The dangerous softness that entered his eyes whenever he forgot their engagement was supposed to be false.

None of it erased the document.

None of it explained Dr. Graves.

And none of it made the voice beneath the floor less real.

Rowan lowered the pistol but did not put it away.

“My family believed the Trust would eventually name a woman capable of opening something called the Archive.”

Olivia’s fingers tightened around the paper.

“Queen Califia’s Archive.”

“Yes.”

“You knew it existed.”

“I knew my grandfather believed it existed.”

“And now?”

His gaze traveled around the room.

“Now I believe my grandfather knew more than he told me.”

“What is in the Archive?”

“Records. Artifacts. Maps. Possibly proof of a history deliberately hidden from the world.”

The scholar in Olivia stirred despite her fear.

Hidden history had always called to her.

Old journals had never seemed dead in her hands. Paper breathed. Ink remembered. Margins preserved thoughts their writers had not dared place in the center of the page.

But this was no research assignment.

This was her life.

“Why would opening it require me?”

“The Trust never explained.”

“And Graves?”

“My grandfather called him the Keeper.”

“That does not sound ominous at all.”

“Graves is a historian, physician, anthropologist, and professional liar. He has served the Trust longer than I have been alive.”

“How much longer?”

Rowan’s answer came reluctantly.

“My grandfather’s notes mention a Dr. Silas Graves in 1951.”

Olivia stared at him.

“The man we met cannot be old enough to have practiced medicine in 1951.”

“I know.”

“Is it a family name?”

“Maybe.”

“You don’t believe that.”

“No.”

Something struck beneath the floor.

Once.

Hard enough to make the fire irons tremble against the hearth.

Rowan raised the pistol again.

A second impact followed, farther across the room.

Then a third.

It sounded as though someone moved below them, testing the floor from underneath.

Olivia turned slowly.

Near the old writing desk, one of the wide pine boards had risen slightly at one end.

“Was that like that before?”

Rowan followed her gaze.

“No.”

They approached together.

The board lifted another fraction of an inch.

Dust rose around its edges.

Rowan bent, hooked his fingers beneath it, and pulled.

Ancient nails protested as the plank came free.

Beneath it lay no crawlspace.

Instead, they found a shallow compartment lined with blackened cedar. Inside rested a narrow wooden box carved with spirals, stars, and symbols Olivia recognized immediately.

She dropped to her knees.

“I have seen these before.”

“Where?”

“In the Califia journals.”

Rowan crouched beside her.

Their shoulders touched.

Neither moved away.

Olivia traced the air above the carvings without making contact.

“This symbol appears beside references to a woman whose name was deliberately removed. Every place it should have appeared, the original scribe scraped the parchment clean.”

“What does the symbol mean?”

“I thought it meant keeper, guardian, or witness.”

“You thought?”

“The dialect predates most surviving translations. The meaning changes depending on how the lines are arranged.”

A circle surrounded by seven points had been carved into the center of the lid. From the circle descended two curved lines that met like an open doorway.

Olivia leaned closer.

“This version is different.”

“Different how?”

“The doorway is open.”

The mark pulsed beneath her gaze.

Olivia blinked.

The carved lines were dark again.

“Did you see that?”

“See what?”

She should have stopped.

Every sensible instinct warned her not to touch the box.

But curiosity had always been Olivia’s most loyal weakness.

She placed two fingers against the circle.

Light exploded beneath her hand.

Hot-fuchsia and gold fire raced through the carvings. It illuminated the symbols one by one until the entire box glowed like an ember lifted from some ancient furnace.

Rowan caught her wrist.

“Let go of it.”

She tried.

Her hand would not move.

The cabin vanished.

For one impossible second, Olivia stood on a cliff above a blue sea beneath a sun larger than any she had ever seen.

Women surrounded her.

Warriors.

Scholars.

Queens.

Their skin ranged from deep mahogany to warm bronze. Gold circlets gleamed against dark hair. Some wore armor fashioned from leather and hammered metal. Others held scrolls, staffs, and blades.

At the cliff’s edge stood a woman taller than the rest.

A golden crown rested upon her braided hair.

Her eyes found Olivia’s.

Recognition passed between them.

Not the recognition of strangers.

The recognition of blood.

“The Bride has returned.”

Olivia gasped.

The vision shattered.

She fell backward against Rowan.

He wrapped one arm around her waist and pulled her away from the box. The glowing carvings extinguished instantly.

The room plunged into darkness.

The fire had gone out.

Not diminished.

Gone.

Every ember lay black inside the hearth.

Olivia could hear Rowan’s breathing near her ear.

Could feel his arm locked around her.

Could feel the pounding of his heart against her back.

“What did you see?” he asked.

Before she could answer, footsteps sounded overhead.

Slow.

Measured.

Crossing the second floor directly above them.

Rowan released her and rose.

Olivia caught his sleeve.

“You were downstairs.”

“I am aware.”

The footsteps continued.

One floorboard groaned.

Then another.

Whoever walked upstairs moved toward the attic staircase.

Rowan activated the flashlight on his phone.

“Stay here.”

“Absolutely not.”

“Olivia.”

“Someone just announced that I am a returned bride while glowing symbols attached themselves to my hand. I am not remaining alone beside the haunted box.”

“It isn’t haunted.”

A heavy object crashed upstairs.

Olivia lifted one eyebrow.

Rowan exhaled.

“Stay close.”

They climbed the staircase together.

The hallway waited in darkness. Their bedroom doors stood open, although Olivia distinctly remembered closing hers.

Cold air flowed from the far end of the corridor.

The attic door stood ajar.

Rowan moved in front of her.

He pushed the door wider with the barrel of the gun.

Narrow wooden steps disappeared upward.

Another footstep sounded above them.

Olivia followed Rowan into the attic.

Dust floated through the beam of his flashlight. Trunks and covered furniture crowded the sloping space beneath the roof. Snow hissed against small circular windows at either end.

No person stood waiting.

Yet something had changed.

White sheets had been pulled from a row of objects along the wall.

Portraits.

Dozens of them.

Olivia approached the nearest frame.

The painting depicted a Black woman wearing a dark blue gown trimmed in silver. Her hair had been arranged in the fashion of the late eighteenth century, though a narrow golden braid circled her crown in a style that seemed far older.

The woman’s face stopped Olivia’s breath.

It was her face.

Not similar.

Not suggestive.

Hers.

The same high cheekbones. The same wide-set eyes. The same small line between the brows that appeared when she was skeptical.

Beneath the portrait, a tarnished brass plate read:

ISADORA JACKSON — 1796

Olivia stepped toward the next.

Another woman with her face stood beside a California mission wall.

MARIA OLIVIA JACKSON — 1824.

The next wore a riding coat and held a rolled map.

ELISE JACKSON — 1849.

Another wore a high-necked Victorian dress.

Another stood beside a 1920s automobile.

Another wore the uniform of a World War II nurse.

Another stood beneath the redwoods in the 1970s.

Every woman looked like Olivia.

Every woman bore the same mark near her left collarbone.

A circle surrounded by seven points.

Beneath it, two curved lines formed an open doorway.

“The Bride Mark,” Rowan said behind her.

Olivia turned.

“You know what it is.”

He did not answer.

“Who are these women?”

“Guardians.”

“Why do they have my face?”

“I don’t know.”

“You are lying.”

“I know what my family believed. That doesn’t mean I know why.”

She backed away from him and bumped into an oval mirror propped against an old steamer trunk.

The mirror’s silvered surface rippled.

Olivia saw herself wearing a white gown.

Not the sweater and jeans she had put on after dinner.

A wedding gown.

Its neckline shimmered with tiny golden symbols. Her hair fell in long dark waves over her shoulders. Behind her stood a man dressed in black.

His face remained hidden.

A blade gleamed in his hand.

Olivia spun around.

No one stood there.

Heat flared beneath her collarbone.

She cried out and grabbed the neck of her sweater.

Rowan was beside her immediately.

“What happened?”

“It burns.”

She pulled the fabric away from her skin.

Light glowed beneath her fingers.

Rowan went still.

The expression on his face terrified her.

“No,” he whispered.

Olivia lowered her hand.

The Bride Mark shone against her skin.

Hot-fuchsia fire outlined the circle. Gold light traced the seven points and descended through the open doorway.

Rowan’s face drained of color.

“It’s happening too soon.”

“What is happening?”

“We need to leave.”

“Not until you tell me what this means.”

“It means the Archive has recognized you.”

“Recognized me as what?”

Rowan gripped her shoulders.

“As the one person capable of opening it.”

“Why is that dangerous?”

“Because opening the Archive requires two people.”

“The bride and the guardian?”

“The bride and the man bound to her.”

The false engagement ring on Olivia’s hand suddenly tightened.

She looked down.

A thread of gold light had appeared beneath the metal.

It traveled from the ring across her skin and wound around Rowan’s wrist.

He released her, but the light remained.

“The contract,” Olivia said.

“It was never only a legal agreement.”

Rage cut through her fear.

“You knew.”

“Not all of it.”

“You knew enough to let me sign.”

“I was trying to keep the Trust from choosing someone worse.”

“Someone worse than the man accused of selling me?”

“Yes.”

His answer came with such fierce certainty that she stopped.

“Who?”

The windows exploded.

Glass flew inward from both ends of the attic.

Rowan threw Olivia to the floor and covered her with his body. Shards struck the walls, frames, and rafters.

A roaring wind invaded the cabin.

Snow spiraled through the attic in glittering white ribbons.

Below them, every door slammed at once.

Candles ignited throughout the house.

Olivia could see their flames through cracks in the floorboards, dozens of tiny points burning in rooms where no candles had stood.

A voice rolled through the cabin.

Ancient.

Powerful.

Neither male nor female.

“The Bride has been chosen.”

The light beneath Olivia’s collarbone blazed.

Pain moved through her—not the tearing pain of injury, but something deeper. It felt as though an old lock inside her had turned.

Images poured into her mind.

A stone chamber beneath the mountains.

Shelves of golden books.

A crown resting inside glass.

A black door marked with her name.

And Dr. Graves standing before it with blood on his hands.

The vision vanished.

Silence fell.

Rowan lifted himself enough to look at her.

“Are you hurt?”

“Get off me.”

He did so immediately.

Olivia pushed herself upright.

“No more partial truths.”

Rowan looked toward the broken window, then back at her.

“The mark identifies the Guardian Bride.”

“I gathered that.”

“According to my grandfather, the Archive cannot be forced open. It must recognize a woman from the original bloodline.”

“Queen Califia’s bloodline.”

“Yes.”

“You believe I am her descendant.”

“The Trust believes it.”

“And you?”

His gaze moved to the glowing mark.

“I believe the evidence is becoming difficult to ignore.”

“What happens when I open the Archive?”

“No one knows.”

“That is not good enough.”

“The last Guardian Bride disappeared before she could open it.”

Olivia glanced at the portraits.

“Which woman?”

Rowan pointed to a portrait from the 1970s.

The brass plate read:

OPHELIA JACKSON — 1978

Olivia moved closer.

Ophelia stood beneath towering redwoods wearing flared jeans and a rust-colored jacket. Her expression was defiant. Her left hand rested on the hood of an old blue Ford.

Beside her stood a young man.

A DeVille.

Olivia knew it from the eyes.

“Who is he?”

Rowan’s voice became almost inaudible.

“My grandfather.”

Olivia turned sharply.

“Your grandfather was bound to her?”

“Yes.”

“What happened?”

“He claimed Graves took her.”

“And no one found her?”

“No.”

“Did your grandfather agree to surrender her too?”

The accusation struck hard.

Rowan did not defend his grandfather.

“I don’t know.”

Olivia looked at the portraits again.

The women no longer seemed like historical curiosities.

They seemed like warnings.

“You said the message was altered.”

“I believe it was.”

“Prove it.”

They returned downstairs.

The candles had extinguished themselves. The fireplace burned again, though neither of them had relit it.

Rowan placed the Trust message on the dining table and examined it beneath the beam of a lantern.

Olivia watched him separate the pages.

“The paper is too thick,” he said.

“It feels normal.”

“The Trust uses handmade sheets. Each page should weigh almost exactly the same.”

He held the final sheet near the fire.

A shadow appeared inside it.

Rowan used a thin knife from the kitchen to separate two layers that had been pressed together.

A hidden page slid free.

The handwriting was old, angular, and written in brown ink.

Rowan stared at it.

“My grandfather wrote this.”

Olivia read the single sentence.

Never trust Dr. Graves unless he already knows your true name.

“What does that mean?”

“I don’t know.”

“What is your true name?”

“Rowan Ambrose DeVille.”

“That is your full name. The message says true name.”

He studied her.

“In some traditions, a true name is not the name given at birth. It is the name that describes what a person is.”

“And what are you?”

Something dangerous moved through his expression.

“That depends on who is asking.”

The lights died.

The refrigerator stopped humming.

The small clock above the stove went dark.

A moment later, the emergency generator coughed once beneath the cabin and failed.

Rowan turned toward the front window.

“Someone is outside.”

Olivia followed his gaze.

A figure stood beyond the porch at the edge of the snow-covered trees.

Tall.

Motionless.

Dressed in a long dark coat.

Snow blew around the figure without touching it.

Rowan reached the door.

“Do not open that.”

“If it’s human, I want answers.”

“And if it isn’t?”

He looked back at her.

“Then I want it farther away from you.”

Rowan opened the door.

Wind rushed inside.

The figure had vanished.

No footprints crossed the snow.

No broken branches marked a path into the forest.

Something rested in the center of the porch.

An antique ring.

Rowan bent to retrieve it.

“Don’t touch it,” Olivia said.

“For once, we agree.”

He used a folded handkerchief to pick it up.

The ring was heavy yellow gold set with a deep blue stone. Tiny symbols had been engraved around the band.

Olivia recognized the Bride Mark inside it.

“It was made for one of the women upstairs.”

Rowan turned the ring toward the lantern.

“There are initials.”

“Whose?”

His face hardened.

“O.J. and R.D.”

Ophelia Jackson.

Rowan’s grandfather.

The missing Guardian Bride and the man bound to protect her.

Rowan carried the ring inside and placed it on the table.

“We leave now.”

“The road is buried.”

“There is an emergency snow vehicle in the detached garage.”

“Of course there is.”

While Rowan went to retrieve their coats and keys, Olivia remained beside the table.

The blue stone caught the firelight.

A whisper slipped across the room.

Not from the floor this time.

From the ring.

“Olivia.”

She took one step closer.

The blue stone brightened.

“Olivia Jackson.”

Her fingers moved before reason could stop them.

She lifted the ring.

Cold traveled through her hand.

A woman’s voice filled her mind.

“Do not let him take you below.”

“Who?”

The answer came in a broken whisper.

“Rowan Ambrose DeVille.”

Olivia nearly dropped the ring.

The voice repeated his name.

Again.

And again.

Rowan Ambrose DeVille.

Rowan Ambrose DeVille.

Rowan Ambrose DeVille.

Footsteps approached from the hallway.

Olivia slipped the ring into her pocket.

Rowan entered carrying their coats.

His gaze moved immediately to the table.

“Where is the ring?”

Before Olivia could answer, the stone fireplace groaned.

A deep mechanical sound vibrated through the cabin.

Rowan dropped the coats.

The massive iron fireback behind the flames shifted.

Olivia stepped away as the burning logs rolled forward without spilling onto the floor.

Stone scraped against stone.

The entire back wall of the fireplace rotated inward.

Behind it appeared a narrow staircase descending into darkness.

Cold air rushed upward.

It smelled of wet stone, cedar smoke, and something older.

Something buried.

Rowan approached the opening.

“This tunnel is not on the property plans.”

“The ring warned me not to let you take me below.”

He turned.

“You touched it?”

“It spoke to me.”

“What did it say?”

Olivia hesitated.

His eyes narrowed.

“Olivia.”

“It said not to let you take me down there.”

Rowan stared into the tunnel.

“Then whoever left the ring knew this entrance would open.”

“Or the woman who owned it knew.”

“Ophelia has been dead for nearly fifty years.”

“You said she disappeared.”

“No one survives fifty years underground.”

A voice floated up the staircase.

Soft.

Male.

Familiar.

“Welcome home, Olivia.”

Rowan raised his pistol and shone his flashlight into the passage.

The stone steps descended farther than the beam could reach.

Symbols covered the walls.

At the bottom of the visible staircase, two points of light opened in the darkness.

Eyes.

Watching them.

Rowan stopped breathing.

The figure below moved one step forward.

Part of a face entered the light.

An older man.

Silver hair.

Sharp cheekbones.

A familiar DeVille mouth.

Rowan’s weapon lowered by an inch.

“That’s impossible.”

The man smiled.

“You always were too certain of what was possible, boy.”

Olivia looked from the man to Rowan.

Rowan’s face had gone completely still.

“Who is he?”

Rowan did not answer.

The man below lifted his chin.

“Tell her.”

Rowan’s voice broke on the words.

“My grandfather.”

Olivia stared down the staircase.

“The man from Ophelia’s portrait?”

“Yes.”

“You said he was dead.”

Rowan tightened his grip on the pistol.

“I buried him fifteen years ago.”

His grandfather’s smile widened.

“No, Rowan.”

He took another step into the light.

The Bride Mark glowed on his palm.

“You buried the man who tried to save Olivia from you.”

End of Chapter Seven

```

Cliff-hanger: The man Rowan buried fifteen years earlier is alive beneath the cabin—and claims Rowan is the true danger to Olivia.

```

Next Chapter

```

Chapter Eight

The Man Beneath the Mountain

Rowan must confront the grandfather he believed was dead, while Olivia discovers that the Bride Mark may not belong to one woman—and that the hidden passage beneath the cabin leads directly toward Queen Califia’s lost Archive.

```

© J. A. Jackson. All Rights Reserved.